jeffi_wu
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加入时间: 2006/03/23 文章: 77 来自: 澳大利亚悉尼 积分: 185
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[Dimension] What I Built — Is Now a Complete System
I’ve done many things in my life, but in my view, I’ve really only done one thing: I built a complete system of my own.
This system is not a product, not a company, and not a bundle of skills —
It is a civilizational unit: structurally self-consistent, mutually reinforcing, and continuously evolving.
It’s not the result of talent, but of decades of accumulation, practice, verification, and structural refinement.
What people tend to notice first are the platforms I’ve built. For example, Australian Winner Network and Australian Winner Forum are Chinese-language information portals I independently created over 20 years ago.
Back then, no one believed a single person could build an entire publishing system, membership system, ad system, and category structure.
But I wrote it, tweaked it, and ran it — line by line, page by page.
In the end, the site became the longest-running Chinese information platform in Australian history, and was permanently archived by the National Library of Australia, now part of the literary database across over 1,100 libraries nationwide.
Also preserved by the National Library is the Australian Rainbow Parrot International Writers’ Association, which I founded, along with the quarterly publication Rainbow Parrot Journal.
This wasn’t just a hobby in writing — it was a complete cross-cultural, cross-language, cross-platform literary publishing system.
From writing, editing, reviewing, compiling, publishing to distribution — I designed and completed the entire closed-loop process myself.
Over two decades later, these platforms are still active, while many institutions built with teams and funding have long vanished.
What I built was not just platforms — it was structure.
Take my logistics system. It was conceived in 2005 and launched in 2013: an intelligent logistics system.
Most logistics platforms rely on ERP systems, APIs, server clusters, and algorithm teams.
Mine ran on Excel + Google Sheets + human-logic scheduling.
It sounds like a joke — but in actual operations, it outperformed countless so-called "intelligent logistics systems."
At the most difficult times, with only an old laptop and self-written formulas, I was able to run import-export coordination across all of Australia.
What powered this wasn’t mere technical ability — it was structural thinking behind it all.
This isn’t about having wide-ranging interests.
It’s not being a generalist or a jack-of-all-trades.
It’s that I applied a unified logic system to solve problems in vastly different fields.
When I practice martial arts, it’s about structural flow.
When I take photos, it’s about spatial light structures.
When I write, it’s conceptual layering and interplay.
Even when I play guitar, I focus on the minimum necessary principle, memory mapping, and rhythm-movement unification.
With just five or six chords, I can fingerpick hundreds of songs — not because I memorized them all, but because I discovered the rules of combination within the system.
Every article, forum, system, platform, and piece of creative work I produce is actually part of the same verification process — all contributing to the same structure.
They may appear scattered, but they are in fact highly coordinated.
For me, writing an article isn’t a flash of inspiration — it’s a step in structural validation.
Publishing a photo isn’t capturing scenery — it’s a test of perceptual structure.
Releasing a logistics table isn’t about showing off tools — it’s the concretization of flow logic.
I never pursued breadth — I pursued depth.
I had no team, no capital, but over decades, I built a forum, a platform, a journal, a logistics system, and an original framework — all by myself.
Others may see it as me doing many unrelated things.
But what I see is this: they all belong to the same structure.
And that’s what I’ve always been doing —
What I built has long been a complete system.
_________________ Jeffi Wu
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